Clifford DAVIS

(1897-1970)

DAVIS, Clifford, a
Representative from Tennessee; born in Hazlehurst, Copiah County,
Miss., November 18, 1897; moved with his parents to Memphis, Tenn.,
in 1911; attended the public schools of Memphis, and was graduated
from the law department of the University of Mississippi at Oxford
in 1918; was admitted to the bar in 1918 and commenced practice in
Memphis, Tenn.; city judge of Memphis 1923-1927; vice mayor and
commissioner of public safety of Memphis 1928-1940; elected as a
Democrat to the Seventy-sixth Congress to fill the vacancy caused
by the resignation of Walter C. Chandler; reelected to the
Seventy-seventh and to the eleven succeeding Congresses and served
from February 15, 1940, to January 3, 1965; chairman, Special
Committee on Campaign Expenditures (Eighty-fourth through
Eighty-eighth Congresses); unsuccessful candidate for renomination
in 1964 to the Eighty-ninth Congress; returned to the practice of
law in Washington, D.C., and practiced until his death there June
8, 1970; interment in Forest Hill Cemetery, Memphis, Tenn.

Source: Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1771-Present